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Point Tandem
Friday, 4th of
November 5:30-9:30pm
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Stephen Mueller COFFEE
Bookabie Turn 2005 coffee on paper
22" x 30" |
Robert Mueller has a history of exploiting the page
as a map for charting journeys through subjective terrain;
the real geography traversed (most importantly Iceland) is
the jumping off point. Few artists have done this as extensively
or as well.
This emotive cartography, which he presents bound in large
books, favors a blue field somewhat like a blueprint, but
more like the bitter cast of an artic sea. The pages are actually
his old lithographs overdrawn with objects alluding to nautical
purposes. Reminiscent of buoys and weirs and fish baskets
these sketches are like thoughts floating to the surface.
Mueller calls these simply “floaters” or “thought
forms.” Such entities bob on the edge of one’s
consciousness and the act of drawing seeks to anchor them.
Robert cites a particular experience in Iceland and a boreal
sea so cold that to fall into it means almost instant death.
Consequently sunken ships or items lost overboard are seldom
if ever salvaged. Except that the sea is often wont to remit
part of what it claims. Long submerged fishing equiptment
or wreckage from a capsized vessel can surface at any moment.
This can be a sharp and surprising apparition, like a secreted
memory suddenly impinging on one’s awareness. Robert
was standing on a beach when a chunk of flotsam from a fishing
vessel burst the surface and loomed, the size of a semi truck,
just offshore. Huge compared to him; small compared to the
sea.
The apparition punctuated his return from an extended trek
to the glacier fields in Iceland’s interior during his
1997 Fulbright residency there. Throughout that trek he carried
large hand made field books to record the landscape and his
response to it. Back in his studio these logs became references
and source material for further development. The results are
a “travelogue” documenting that commingling of
external and internal.
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Robert Mueller Touch
Book I detail 2005 mixed media book
16" x 22" |
Chronicler:
KLEIN BOTTLES
The look and feel of maps also has an extended history in
the work of Robert’s older brother Stephen. His Bookabie
Turn paintings have a subtle but definite suggestion of
large-scale geography which maps are usually used to represent.
The use of maps by both brothers was an unintended parallel
in their work, and, as it turns out, only one of several
despite their sporadic contact and geographic separation.
Another such parallel appeared when the elder Mueller began
including “thought forms” of his own. These
forms are, in a sense, pre-existing or found objects, as
he borrowed them from the realm of mathematics. One such
form is the topological oddity known as the Klein bottle.
It is actually a four dimensional object that manifests
in physical reality as a closed, self-intersecting surface.
It looks a lot like a laboratory flask whose neck has extended
and snaked back in on itself. One strange feature of the
“bottle” is that it appears to enclose space,
but in fact has no volume.
The mathematics did not concern Mueller, but the bottle’s
stylized organic shape and its contradictory formulation
from logical introspection did. The images he develops using
the bottle have it juxtaposed with boats and fish, another
sort of vessel and actual organic form.
The images are cleanly rendered like line illustrations
from a textbook on surreal science. He incorporated other
informational graphics, such as the flat images found in
airline seats to instruct on emergency procedures. His imagery
is not studiously chosen, but gleaned according to what
strikes his fancy. The background upon which he floats these
graphics can vary from Hokusai prints to raucously marbled
papers and are selected without thought to a message. Mueller
attempts to garner his data subjectively and without pre-judgment.
His goal is to guard against setting pre-conditions that
might ossify perception.
The Klein Bottle series also brought a third unintended
parallel to Robert’s decision to use the book format
to present his work. Stephen silk-screened these images
on the recto and verso of the same sheet of paper to create
diptychs in which only one panel can be seen at a time.
As such they are often presented in portfolio. The viewer
flips through the work with the back of one image becoming
the facing page for the next (for purposes of this exhibit
they are framed).
Collaborative Works:
GENTLE HARBOR and ALWAYS WAITING
In addition to reflecting the history of their makers, the
two artists’ images reflect the story of their own
making. This is especially true of the collabora- tive work
of the two artists. The Muellers exchanged works that were
to be used as the beginnings of a common history for them
both. The brothers, each in their own manner, have layered
and compressed external and internal experiences into personal
palimpsests, similar to those ancient parchments on which
scholars laminated their own thoughts and research onto
that of their predecessors, that invite probing and research
of the viewer.
Together, however, the work gains even more density as if
the added thought and experience have imbued their col -
laborations with greater weight. Gentle Harbor and Always
Waiting, for ex- ample, narrate with stories commensur-
ate to the weight and complexity of their parts. Gentle
Harbor tells the tale of Robert’s thought forms—recalling
prim- itive fishing instruments—morphing into those
scientific entities—the funnel of the diagram of a
black hole or the Klein bottle—favored by Stephen.
In this harborscape the sensed and the logical co-exist.
Always Waiting conveys a less com- forting message. As thought
form trans - forms into fish, the fish is then filleted
by a fateful hand thrust into the picture. This is the same
hand, which in Gentle Harbor appears to gesture a blessing.
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Robert Mueller Draumer
detail 2005 mixed media book 16"
x 22" |
An Unmarked Record:
TOUCH BOOKS I & II;
BOOKABIE TURN
for Rosemary Dunlop
Almost simultaneously both brothers developed an aversion
to mark making and sought to create their most recent works
from processes that eschewed drawing or writing. The similarity
ends there, however, as these two series are the most markedly
different of any of the two artists’ works.
Robert left behind the micro-management of making his personal
mark by dipping paper he had cut to shape into brightly colored
house paint. Sometimes he modulated the color field by pressing
the still wet coating against a glass or plastic sheet. This
heavy coating of the bight color yielded extraordinarily intense
fields. In some cases he cut openings in the center of the
“field” with surgical precision. Within these
incisions, that resemble keyholes sliced in the shape of emblems
and weapons, are compressed Rorschach blots, miniature streams
of paint and pent-up shapes struggling to pour out. Paint
and paper are diced into slivers of meaning, heated by the
visual pressures Mueller imposes. Many of the emblems, especially
the yoni and lingam of Hindi, carry the simultaneous pain
and pleasure of erotic delight or of unfulfilled desire. Touch
Books I and II are achingly, stridently elegant works.
On a visit to his childhood Australia, Stephen Mueller returned
and camped on the Great Australian Bight, a sparsely populated
stretch of coast along the arched underbelly of the continent
where the windblown sands of the Outback desert meet wind-driven
waves of the Southern Ocean. The patterns he observed there
were those generated by turbulence known to physicists as
chaos. He was inspired to harness the same natural forces
to paint his paintings.
The brown of the sand became coffee and the blue of the sea
became blue gouache, which he combined in the simplest of
ways outdoors. Through evaporation, capillary action and absorption
patterns of surprising complexity and beauty emerged: reticulated
surfaces and concentric wave patterns of interlacing colors
appear in all manner of distribution. All of this physics
describes the “science” of the works, but nothing
of the impact of Stephen’s Bookabie Turn. The paintings
of this series possess the quiet drama and sparkle of a 19th
century Romantic watercolor executed in umber and ultramarine
washes.
The works of the Mueller brothers taken together are more
than a collective of their parts. As a body, the works pose
questions about where the individual and his environment stop
and start; about what is shared through genetics and what
is shared through common histories. One wonders, when seeing
these works, about how the imagination works such that it
can be held in common. There is evidence in this exhibit that
these are brothers by more than physical accident.
Many people live their histories over and over and so do not
live in the new day. In the conflation of their two histories
these two artists have helped each other to live in that new
day and those to follow.
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Stephen Mueller Green
and Red 2004 silk screen 6"
x 10" |
Stephen Mueller was born in Joliet, Illinois in
1952.
From the ages of eight to twenty he lived in Switzerland,
Germany and Australia. He returned to America
in 1972 to attend the John Herron School of Art where
he studied with Gary Freeman and received his BFA in
1976. He received his MFA in Sculpture from the
University of Illinois—Urbana–Champaign in 1978.
After graduating he moved to Chicago, Illinois to
co-found Vector Custom Fabricating, Inc.—a company
that specializes in the fabrication of architectural metals
and monumental sculpture. Over the last twenty-seven
years he has worked with several artists on their larger
projects—among them Mike Baur, Terrence Karpowicz,
Bruce White, Christine Rojek, Neil Goodman, Donald
Gummer, Stephen Luecking and Vito Acconci.
Recent exhibitions of his work include a show with
Cecilia Allen and Roger Blakley at Artemisia in 2002;
the 2004 group show Summer Summit at Lipa
Gallery; and in 2005 the Small Print Show at the
Chicago Printmakers Collaborative as well as Echoes
of Complicity at Lipa Gallery.
stevemuellerart.com
Robert Mueller is an Associate Professor
of Printmaking and Area Coordinator of the Printmaking Program
at the University of Florida—Gainesville. He received
his BFA from the University of Utah—Salt Lake City
in 1985, and his MFA from the Arizona State University—Tempe
in 1988. Mueller’s expertise is in lithography, intaglio,
relief print, collaborative printmaking and installations.
He is technical director of the Alagarto Press, an international
visiting artist print project at the University of Florida.
The project is a graduate assisted collaborative endeavor
with nationally and internationally renowned artists. Mueller’s
creative work is strongly inspired by his world travels.
These experiences range from long solo wilderness treks
in remote areas of Iceland as a Fulbright Scholar, to research
trips to Ireland and Scotland. Most recently he taught a
printmaking course on the Greek island of Skopelos. Through
writing daily journals, producing works on-site and later
development in the studio, Mueller narrates the emotional,
physical and mental sense of place that he calls “psycho-geography.”
SELECTED GROUP EXHIBITIONS
• 2005 Faculty and student exhibition and reception;
Skopelos Foundation—Skopelos, Greece. Included in
exhibition 8 untitled prints and artist book.
• 2004 SOFA exposition at the Navy Pier; Chicago,
Illinois. Limerick Ireland—Site, Intervention, Identity;
Limerick City Gallery of Art—Limerick, Ireland.
• 2003 39th Annual Faculty Exhibition—The Madonna
Building (Art Basel); Miami, Florida.
• 2002 Hermanamientos 2 Exposicion de Estudiantes/
Professors’ De La Universidad De Florida; University
of Veracruz—Xalapa, Mexico.
• 1999 Invitational Works on Paper Exhibition; University
of Hawaii at Hilo, Hawaii.
• 1997 Group Exhibition of Vitreographs, Etchings
and Relief Prints by American Artists; Icelandic Print Studio
Gallery—Rekjavik, Iceland.
1996 Hand-Pulled Prints IV; Stonemetal Press Parchman Stremmel
Galleries—San Antonio, Texas. Awarded First Place.
25th Bradley National Print and Drawing Exhibition; Heuser
and Hartman Galleries—Peoria, Illinois. Awarded Juror’s
Merit Cash Award.
• 1994 Earth Elements; Capitol Building Gallery—
Tallahassee, Florida. Two person exhibition.
• 1993 1st Egyptian International Print Triennale;
National Center for Fine Arts—Giza, Egypt. National
Works on Paper Exhibition; University of Texas at Tyler,
Texas.
• 1991 International Triennial of Graphic Arts; Cracow,
Poland. Additional venues in Nuernberg and Augsburg. Image
published in catalogue p. 193. Farrington-Keith National
Juried Exhibition; Clara Kott Von Storch Gallery—Dexter,
Michigan.
SELECTED SOLO EXHIBITIONS
• 1996 Sketchbook Visions; Harris House of Atlantic
Center for the Arts.
• 1994 Backpacking Through Remote Terrains; Shands
Cancer Center—Gainesville, Florida.
• 1993 Phantom Cargo: Images for Survival;
University of South Carolina Art Gallery—Spartanburg,
South Carolina. Phantom Cargo: Images for Survival; Albany
Museum of Art—Albany, Georgia.
• 1992 Circumference; Florida School of the Arts,
Main Gallery/St. Johns Community College—Palatka,
Florida.
SELECTED GRANTS AND AWARDS
• 2004 Faculty Scholarship Enhancement Fund
• 2001 Sabbatical Leave—Fall Semester, Iceland
• 1998- Teaching Improvement Program Award—
• 1999 TIP
• 1996 Awarded Fulbright Scholar—Iceland Summer
of 1997
SELECTED PUBLICATION
• 1992 Printmaking: A Primary Form of Expression Author:
Eldon L. Cunningham; I Authored and contributed images for
a chapter. Two images in black and white two images in color.
Three and a half pages of text. Published by University
Press of Colorado, copyright 1992; pp. 134-137.
bmueller@ufl .edu
Essay text
Stephen Luecking
Photography
William H. Bengtson
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Point Tandem
Opening reception with the artists on Friday, 4th of
November 5:30-9:30pm
THE EXHIBIT RUNS THROUGH DECEMBER 3 .
Individual and collaborative works by:
Stephen Mueller and
Robert Mueller
For further information please contact Lipa Gallery
at
312-212-1522.
Lipa Gallery is located on the 5th floor of the Fine
Arts Building
410 S. Michigan Ave.
Gallery Hours
Tues-Sat 12-6pm
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